Brattleboro's Three Puppeteers Stage a Family Production

State of the Arts

’Tis the season of gingerbread houses topped with icing, gumdrops and candy canes — treats made slightly less appetizing when you consider the trouble they caused two children in the classic Brothers Grimm tale. But there’s no need to fear the sweet-looking structures of the National Marionette Theater’s Hansel and Gretel, a puppet performance with 42-year-old roots, at Burlington’s Black Box Theater this week.

The Brattleboro-based company, founded in 1967 by David Syrotiak Sr., staged the peasant fable of Germanic origin in its first year. Since then, the theater has traveled the globe with expansive fairy-tale fare, and it received a citation from Union Internationale de la Marionette in 1975 and 2004 for excellence in puppetry — the first American marionette theater to earn that honor. In the 1980s, Syrotiak’s sons, David and Peter, joined the family biz. “We’ve always been involved in puppetry … We had all these puppets around the house,” recalls David Syrotiak Jr., who learned to manipulate them by dangling hand-carved marionettes over his bunk bed.

Among performances including Aladdin, Sleeping Beauty and Peter Pan, staged in locales ranging from small Italian towns to Washington, D.C., Syrotiak Jr. says Hansel and Gretel stands out as one of his favorite shows. NMT has freshened the act, now in its third reincarnation, with updated marionettes and scenery — though, he notes, “The witch is the original from 1967.”

The elder Syrotiak, now 73 and retired from road performances, helped get the production off the ground by managing the set design and painting in the transformed industrial building that functions as NMT’s Brattleboro studio. Because NMT prerecords the vocal tracks for better quality, he also voices the witch.

Each of NMT’s productions requires a solid year to create. “To build a marionette from scratch takes about 100 hours,” says Syrotiak Jr. From the title characters right down to the passerby birds and ducks, Hansel and Gretel calls for 16 of them. A 50-foot-long scroll of painted scenery and music from Engelbert Humperdinck’s 1893 opera Hänsel und Gretel will provide the backdrop in this production.

Everyone who’s seen a puppet show knows the real magic happens above the stage, not on it. But for these puppeteers, it’s all about the audience. “We spend so much time designing our own little world for the puppets,” says Syrotiak Jr., “and the satisfaction for me comes when you see the kids’ faces. Who knows, maybe we’ll inspire someone to be a puppeteer in the future.”

More by Carolyn Fox

When the clock strikes midnight
on December 31, Burlington will
usher in 2018 with a bang of fireworks
over Lake Champlain. But
that’s just the final touch on the
annual revelry that is First Night
Burlington. Founded in 1983, the
event has become Vermont’s largest
single-day arts celebration, a
substance-free festival serving up
13 hours of eclectic entertainment
in more than a dozen downtown
venues. Buy a button, then
crisscross the city for a classic
cabaret by Burlington’s Lyric Theatre,
aerial artistry and general
clowning around by Vermont’s
award-winning
Circus Smirkus, highenergy
funk-rock by
local band Gang of
Thieves, and so much
more. Cheers to the
New Year.

From bustling Church Street to the highly trafficked waterfront, Burlington is anything but a ghost town — unless Thea Lewis is leading your way. The actor, author and paranormal historian is also Vermont's queen of Halloween, and, in the weeks leading up to that haunted holiday, she presides over three walking tours rife with local history and mystery. The Darkness Falls Tour explores the spooky spirits of Burlington's downtown; the Wicked Waterfront Tour dives into shipwrecks, lake monsters and shoreline mischief; and the Cemetery Tour travels to the city's most ghoulish gravestones. These tales are spine-tingling but typically appropriate for ages 9 and up.

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